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Frontline engagement through social gamification: Reducing health | 32589
Pediatrics & Therapeutics

Pediatrics & Therapeutics
Open Access

ISSN: 2161-0665

+44 1478 350008

Frontline engagement through social gamification: Reducing healthcare-associated conditions and having fun!


5th International Conference on Pediatric Nursing & Healthcare

July 11-12, 2016 Cologne, Germany

Arup Roy-Burman

University of California San Francisco, USA

Posters & Accepted Abstracts: Pediat Therapeut

Abstract :

Hospitals are dangerous. The US healthcare industry wastes over $200 billion dollars annually in failed attempts to optimize care. Medical errors cause over 440,000 deaths. Best Practice Standards are NOT standard practice. Current technological solutions focus on the centuries-old dyad of doctor and patient, neglecting a key gap: Our frontline staff-- nurses, therapists, pharmacists-- who actually deliver care. The frontlines are lost in a system of accelerating complexity and encumbered by traditional professional silos-- with technology more a barrier than an enabler. At UCSF, we are developing a mobile workforce solution to engage frontline staff in generating, learning, and adhering to best practices. Smart incentives, gamified learning and just-in-time tutorials ��? selected and created by the frontlines to meet their unit��?s needs��? work together to decrease hospital-acquired conditions and increase patient satisfaction. We deployed our prototype in pediatric BMT, Heme-Onc, and ICU, aiming to reduce central line-associated bloodstream infections (CLABSI)-- a costly, dangerous problem at all hospitals, though one addressable by adherence to best practices -- if only staff could be incentivized to rigorously master the standards of care. Motivated by fun, software-based contests with real-world recognition and prizes, nurses engaged. The result: CLABSI was cut by 48%, with an estimated savings of 3 lives, over 300 hospital days, and $1M USD. With continued development and broad adoption, this platform will not only enhance internal outcomes, but can also drive inter-institutional sharing of practice standards and previously siloed internal improvements, elevating healthcare quality worldwide.

Biography :

Email: Arup.Roy-Burman@ucsf.edu

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